Saturday, June 6

The Templarios are totally dismantled: General Gurrola....

Translated by Otis B Fly-Wheel for Borderland Beat from a Proceso article

[ Subject Matter: Knights Templar Cartel, General Gurrola, MichoacánRecommendation: Some prior knowledge of La Tuta and CT would be useful]

Reporter: Proceso RedactionThe Commander for the Security of Michoacán, Felipe Gurrola Ramirez, said today that the Knights Templar Cartel has been totally dismantled, after the capture or killing of its principal leaders.

Gurrola added that some of the secondary leaders were outside of Michoacán.

The Army General indicated through communication media that actually there are no indicators that the Knights Templar exist as an criminal organization that one could locate.

" One can see a reduction in some places, but as a criminal organization it is dismantled", emphasized Gurrola.He includes that they have locations of possible successors of Servando Gomez "La Tuta", leader of this criminal organization, and that Homero Gonzalez, "El Gallito", nephew of Narazio Moreno, "El Chayo" or "El Mas Loco" has assumed leadership of said Cartel.

" One cannot rule out that they don't exist, its difficult that someone can take charge of an organization that doesn't exist, they have no presence", said the Military Commander.

Before the possibility that other criminal groups have entered Michoacán from other States, Gurrola said " its a priority of the Group for Coordination that the don't avoid that other criminal groups from other States could enter, principally from Jalisco, Mexico State, and Guerrero, and for that we have a permanent operation to seal the borders, to avoid the entrance of other criminal organizations that could complicate recent advances in Security of Michoacán.

Five people were arrested and nearly 700 pounds of cocaine seized in what officials on Thursday called the largest cocaine bust in the state in recent memory, spanning from the Inland Empire to Los Angeles County.

Officials seized 50 kilograms (110 pounds) of cocaine during a traffic stop in Victorville on Tuesday evening, which led them to a house in the 11400 block of Charlesworth Road in Santa Fe Springs. That’s where investigators seized 256 kilos (570 pounds) of cocaine on Wednesday.

Three people were arrested during the traffic stop and two were arrested at the home in Santa Fe Springs, all with alleged ties to the Sinaloa Cartel, an international drug-trafficking and organized crime group based in Mexico.

This is one of the biggest ones I’ve seen in many years,” said Carlos Mendoza, deputy director for the Los Angeles Interagency Metropolitan Police Apprehension Crime Task (IMPACT) Force.

The bust was the culmination of a month-long investigation by L.A. IMPACT, a multi-agency team made up of officers and agents from numerous federal, state and local law enforcement agencies.

“These people we arrested are very well trusted” in the cartel, Mendoza said. “You don’t just give away 300 kilos to someone to hold on to, so these people have good connections in the cartel.”

Detectives with the task force were monitoring the Santa Fe Springs area when they witnessed a drug

exchange in a strip mall Tuesday, Mendoza said.

They followed a vehicle and California Highway Patrol officials pulled it over on Highway 395 in Victorville, near the Hesperia border in San Bernardino County. Authorities found about 110 pounds of cocaine inside the vehicle. The three adults were booked into San Bernardino County jail on $5 million bail and a child was placed in protective custody.

“From there he (the dealer) would have distributed it to other lower-level dealers,” Mendoza said. “So it could have gone anywhere in the country.”

The traffic stop led investigators to a home in Victorville but no drugs were found, he said. However, further information pointed officials to the Santa Fe Springs home, where the 563 pounds of cocaine was found in the garage. In addition to the two adults booked into L.A. County jail on $5 million bail, one woman was released and three children were taken into protective custody, Mendoza said.

Lopez was charged with possession with the intent to sell and transport of a controlled substance; Manriquez was charged with possession with the intent to sell and transportation of cocaine; Barazza was charged with possession with the intent to sell. Perez and Samano were charged with possession with the intent to sell.

The cocaine found in Santa Fe Springs and Victorville had a combined street value of $35 million, Mendoza said.

The cocaine has been linked to the Mexican Sinaloa drug cartel, however, Department of Justice spokeswoman Michelle Gregory said she does not believe those arrested are members of the cartel; instead she believes they are associates of the group.

“It’s never typically directly the cartel,” she explained. “These people that were bringing the drugs up in the U.S. appear to have ties to the cartel.”

On Thursday, residents in the area said there was little trouble at the property and few signs of the clandestine activities allegedly taking place inside what officials called a “stash pad.”

Several neighbors said the home had been vacant for a year, possibly in foreclosure, but that two men had moved into the house about two or three months ago.

There was remodeling going on at the property, so residents didn’t think much of it. They said the residents of the home kept to themselves. One neighbor said he saw someone who played with their children there.

“I’m glad I didn’t go over” to meet them, said Maria Frias, who has lived on the street for four years. “After hearing what was going on there.”

Manriquez, Lopez and Barazza are scheduled to appear at Victorville Superior Court at 12:30 p.m. today. Perez and Samano are scheduled to appear at Downey Municipal Court at 8:30 a.m. today.

Suspects Perez and Garcia with their attorney and interpreter

In Court Today:

Two men arrested at what authorities called a Santa Fe Springs “stash pad” for an international drug-trafficking cartel claimed innocence in a courtroom on Friday.

A judge will have to review the source of any bail money submitted on behalf of Eddie Perez, 41, and Jose Garcia Samano, 39, who were being held on $5 million bail each.

Judge David Fields set a preliminary hearing for the pair on June 17

The two men were wearing blue short-sleeve shirts and pants but were not handcuffed as they casually talked to each other, another defendant and an attorney before their arraignment at the Clara Shortridge Foltz Criminal Justice Center on Friday afternoon. Both men used Spanish-language interpreters during the hearing.

Eligio Alvarez Manriquez, 24, Jose Manuel Lopez, 22, and Cintia Ferro Barazza, 24, were scheduled to be arraigned Friday at a Los Angeles court but district attorney’s officials could not verify that late Friday afternoon.

District attorney’s spokeswoman Sarah Ardalani said she did not know when Manriquez, Lopez and Barazza would be arraigned.

Perez and Samano live in Santa Springs while the three other suspects are from Victorville.

Perez’s attorney, Guadalupe Valencia, who was represented in court by attorney Jason Ronis, noted his client pleaded not guilty but declined to comment on the case because he hasn’t seen the evidence.

“I have not seen any of the discoveries yet but I understand it’s a very serious complaint,” Valencia said in an email.